Country singer Ingrid Andress felt the support of her community after sparking backlash with her drunk national anthem performance last summer.
Andress, 33, spoke for the first time about the now-viral mishap â which resulted in her checking into rehab â on the Thursday, March 6, episode of Nick Viallâs âViall Filesâ podcast. Andress said it was âreally meaningfulâ that other musicians rallied around her in that moment.
âI was expecting no one to reach out, but there was just so much outpouring of love from female country artists in Nashville,â she said. âI actually felt, like, so loved and seen going into rehab.â
Andress named Elle King and Kelsea Ballerini as being among the artists who sent her support. âElle King was like, âThis is just all part of it, girl,ââ Andress recalled. âSheâs obviously been there before, too. ⊠And that really meant a lot to me.â
In June 2024, Andress sang âThe Star-Spangled Bannerâ at the MLB Home Run Derby in Arlington, Texas, and her rendition quickly made headlines. One day after the event, Andress announced she was seeking professional help.
âIâm not gonna bullsâ yâall, I was drunk last night,â she wrote in an Instagram statement at the time. âIâm checking myself into a facility today to get the help I need. That was not me last night. I apologize to MLB, all the fans, and this country I love so much for that rendition. Iâll let yâall know how rehab is I hear itâs super fun.â
As she reflected on the mishap on Thursday, Andress admitted that she âwas really loving the numbing feelingâ that she had after drinking. âIt wasnât until I woke up the next day where I was like, âOK, this is so unlike me.â Like, âThis is not OK.â ⊠Because I actually walked out [onto the field] and did not care. I was just like, âI donât care how this goes,ââ she said.
Andress was âso fâed upâ that she initially thought she âkind of nailedâ her performance. âMy best friend called me after I got off the field and I remember briefly talking to her. Sheâs like, âSo how do you think that went?â ⊠She was very delicate,â Andress recalled.
The songwriter added that when she woke up the next morning, she didnât have much recollection of the performance, which was âterrifying.â At that point, she made the decision to call her management and go to rehab.
âIt only took, you know, global humiliation for me to be like, âThis is a problem,ââ she joked. (Andress recently performed the anthem again at a Colorado Avalanche hockey game, her first public event since the MLB incident.)
King, meanwhile, gave her own drunken performance at the Grand Ole Opry in January 2024 during a tribute to Dolly Parton. âIâll tell you one thing more: âHi, my name is Elle King [and] Iâm fâing hammered,ââ she said in footage from the event shared online.
Several months later, King revealed on the âDear Chelseaâ podcast that she was going through something âvery heavy and traumatic,â which led to her âbig no-noâ on stage. âI suffer from severe PTSD. That day, I hadnât eaten, I hadnât slept in days, and I was really overwhelmed. I was like a shell of myself,â she explained in May 2024. âI take one shot too many, and Iâm just not there in my body, Iâm not there. I donât remember it. ⊠I was mortified.â
King said she apologized to both the Opry and Parton, who told her, âWell, Dollyâs not mad at you, why should the world be?â
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